The President failed to address the barrage of criticism with which he has been met following an extraordinary press conference on Tuesday during which he ‘went rogue’, giving unscripted responses to reporters over intense questioning on his initial response to the violence in Charlottesville.

Instead, he praised the actions of Kim Jong-un in withdrawing his threat against Guam, and repeated his notorious campaign slogan on the social media site.

Mr Trump’s advisers had hoped those remarks might quell a crush of criticism from both Republicans and Democrats.

But his retorts on Tuesday suggested he had been a reluctant participant in that clean-up effort.

A senior White House adviser told NBC News that Mr Trump’s team “was stunned” as he went off script during a heated exchange with reporters.

During an impromptu press conference in the lobby of his Manhattan skyscraper, he praised his original response to Charlottesville and angrily blamed liberal groups in addition to white supremacists for the violence.

Some of those protesting at the rally to save a statue of Confederate General Robert E Lee were “also very violent”, he said.

President Trump was on the offensive

“There are two sides to a story,” he said. He added that some facts about the violence still aren’t known.

As Mr Trump talked, his aides on the sidelines of the lobby stood in silence.

Chief of staff John Kelly crossed his arms and stared down at his shoes. Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders looked around the room trying to make eye contact with other senior aides.

When asked to explain his Saturday comments about Charlottesville, Mr Trump looked down at his notes and again read a section of his initial statement that denounced bigotry but did not single out white supremacists. He then tucked the paper back into his jacket pocket.

He said he had yet to call the mother of the woman killed when a car ploughed into a group of anti-racist counter-protesters but said that he would soon “reach out.”

As Mr Trump finally walked away from his lectern, he stopped to answer one more shouted question: Would be plan to visit Charlottesville, the college town ravaged by the hate-filled clashes?

The president’s response was to note that he owned property there and to say it was one of the largest wineries in the United States.

On Monday protesters on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue had tried to spoil Mr Trump’s homecoming with signs bearing messages such as “stop the hate, stop the lies” and chanting “shame, shame, shame” and “not my president”.

Mr Trump’s softer statement on Saturday had come as graphic images of a car ploughing into a crowd in Charlottesville were playing continually on television.

White nationalists had assembled in the city to protest against plans to take down the statue and counter-protesters gathered in opposition.

Fights broke out, and then a car drove into the opponents of the white supremacists. One woman was killed and many more badly hurt. Twenty-year-old James Alex Fields Jr of Ohio is charged with second-degree murder and other counts.